Rove, Roam and Rune Gustavo are back with their girls at their sides in the third and final book of the Dark as Night Trilogy; A Day Yet to Come.
Powers surge, enemies switch sides and one is sworn to secrecy to save another. Can the brothers unite with the destined Sisters of the Realm and beat back the worst evil imaginable and restore magic, or will evil take over and rule the Enchanted Realm

During a school trip to the UK, American teens Lance and Megan find the legendary excalibur in a toilet bowl and Lance knows he was born to wield it. Guided by three powerful, grumpy and occasionally obscene sorcerers, they set out without asking the truly important question; can you ever truly trust a wizard? Black Blade is the quest for the Holy Grail like you’ve never read it before.

Camelot is being built, the king returns from overseas victorious and Tor is still a squire. Tor still believes he is not yet good enough to be a knight and a chance to escape himself is presented in the form of a note from a lady he never managed to find years ago. What he discovers will threaten friendships, his own life and the very core of Camelot and that is only the beginning.

Ridmark Arban is the Gray Knight, leading the defense of Andomhaim from the brutal Frostborn.
Yet the realm of Andomhaim is riven with civil war. The false king Tarrabus has usurped the crown in the name of the shadow of Incariel, and the loyal lords must fight the ruthless rebels.
Unless Ridmark can defeat Tarrabus and reunify Andomhaim, the Frostborn will prevail.

During World War II, a high-spirited American archaeologist named Saunders is asked by the British Government to locate King Arthur’s sword, Excalibur. Saunders accepts and is quickly plummeted into a race against time and against Nazis. He must secure The Sword (as Excalibur is called) and spirit it away before Hitler can take possession of it for dark purposes.

Despite all the efforts that exhausted the search for Arthur through the centuries, he has managed to escape history. Since not only is there lack of evidence to support who he really was, can there be proof of his actual existence?There is some reference to Arthur through archaeology, myths and recorded history, however, there are many inconsistencies throughout them all. Disentangling the truth